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authorfanquake <fanquake@gmail.com>2020-11-18 20:39:19 +0800
committerfanquake <fanquake@gmail.com>2020-11-18 20:52:38 +0800
commitdc5a35a5072b273ce2be5b2110bacf298150a725 (patch)
tree17f9b354215a24a61af0233b542e865c9fabe2a7 /doc/release-notes.md
parent5bcae7967f73353aff5e6d2f696bbf47ec6fdbb3 (diff)
doc: clean out release notes post branch-off
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/release-notes.md')
-rw-r--r--doc/release-notes.md386
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 382 deletions
diff --git a/doc/release-notes.md b/doc/release-notes.md
index 0331328ff5..57067138b0 100644
--- a/doc/release-notes.md
+++ b/doc/release-notes.md
@@ -45,11 +45,6 @@ wallet versions of Bitcoin Core are generally supported.
Compatibility
==============
-During this release cycle, work has been done to ensure that the codebase is fully
-compatible with C++17. The intention is to begin using C++17 features starting
-with the 0.22.0 release. This means that a compiler that supports C++17 will be
-required to compile 0.22.0.
-
Bitcoin Core is supported and extensively tested on operating systems
using the Linux kernel, macOS 10.12+, and Windows 7 and newer. Bitcoin
Core should also work on most other Unix-like systems but is not as
@@ -60,422 +55,49 @@ From Bitcoin Core 0.20.0 onwards, macOS versions earlier than 10.12 are no
longer supported. Additionally, Bitcoin Core does not yet change appearance
when macOS "dark mode" is activated.
-The node's known peers are persisted to disk in a file called `peers.dat`. The
-format of this file has been changed in a backwards-incompatible way in order to
-accommodate the storage of Tor v3 and other BIP155 addresses. This means that if
-the file is modified by 0.21.0 or newer then older versions will not be able to
-read it. Those old versions, in the event of a downgrade, will log an error
-message "Incorrect keysize in addrman deserialization" and will continue normal
-operation as if the file was missing, creating a new empty one. (#19954)
-
Notable changes
===============
P2P and network changes
-----------------------
-- The mempool now tracks whether transactions submitted via the wallet or RPCs
- have been successfully broadcast. Every 10-15 minutes, the node will try to
- announce unbroadcast transactions until a peer requests it via a `getdata`
- message or the transaction is removed from the mempool for other reasons.
- The node will not track the broadcast status of transactions submitted to the
- node using P2P relay. This version reduces the initial broadcast guarantees
- for wallet transactions submitted via P2P to a node running the wallet. (#18038)
-
-- The size of the set of transactions that peers have announced and we consider
- for requests has been reduced from 100000 to 5000 (per peer), and further
- announcements will be ignored when that limit is reached. If you need to dump
- (very) large batches of transactions, exceptions can be made for trusted
- peers using the "relay" network permission. For localhost for example it can
- be enabled using the command line option `-whitelist=relay@127.0.0.1`.
- (#19988)
-
-- The Tor onion service that is automatically created by setting the
- `-listenonion` configuration parameter will now be created as a Tor v3 service
- instead of Tor v2. The private key that was used for Tor v2 (if any) will be
- left untouched in the `onion_private_key` file in the data directory (see
- `-datadir`) and can be removed if not needed. Bitcoin Core will no longer
- attempt to read it. The private key for the Tor v3 service will be saved in a
- file named `onion_v3_private_key`. To use the deprecated Tor v2 service (not
- recommended), then `onion_private_key` can be copied over
- `onion_v3_private_key`, e.g.
- `cp -f onion_private_key onion_v3_private_key`. (#19954)
-
Updated RPCs
------------
-- The `getpeerinfo` RPC now has additional `last_block` and `last_transaction`
- fields that return the UNIX epoch time of the last block and the last valid
- transaction received from each peer. (#19731)
-
-- `getnetworkinfo` now returns two new fields, `connections_in` and
- `connections_out`, that provide the number of inbound and outbound peer
- connections. These new fields are in addition to the existing `connections`
- field, which returns the total number of peer connections. (#19405)
-
-- Exposed transaction version numbers are now treated as unsigned 32-bit
- integers instead of signed 32-bit integers. This matches their treatment in
- consensus logic. Versions greater than 2 continue to be non-standard
- (matching previous behavior of smaller than 1 or greater than 2 being
- non-standard). Note that this includes the joinpsbt command, which combines
- partially-signed transactions by selecting the highest version number.
- (#16525)
-
-- `getmempoolinfo` now returns an additional `unbroadcastcount` field. The
- mempool tracks locally submitted transactions until their initial broadcast
- is acknowledged by a peer. This field returns the count of transactions
- waiting for acknowledgement.
-
-- Mempool RPCs such as `getmempoolentry` and `getrawmempool` with
- `verbose=true` now return an additional `unbroadcast` field. This indicates
- whether initial broadcast of the transaction has been acknowledged by a
- peer. `getmempoolancestors` and `getmempooldescendants` are also updated.
-
-- The `bumpfee`, `fundrawtransaction`, `sendmany`, `sendtoaddress`, and `walletcreatefundedpsbt`
-RPC commands have been updated to include two new fee estimation methods "BTC/kB" and "sat/B".
-The target is the fee expressed explicitly in the given form. Note that use of this feature
-will trigger BIP 125 (replace-by-fee) opt-in. (#11413)
-
-- In addition, the `estimate_mode` parameter is now case insensitive for all of
- the above RPC commands. (#11413)
-
-- The `bumpfee` command now uses `conf_target` rather than `confTarget` in the
- options. (#11413)
-
-- The `getpeerinfo` RPC no longer returns the `banscore` field unless the configuration
- option `-deprecatedrpc=banscore` is used. The `banscore` field will be fully
- removed in the next major release. (#19469)
-
-- The `testmempoolaccept` RPC returns `vsize` and a `fees` object with the `base` fee
- if the transaction would pass validation. (#19940)
-
-- The `getpeerinfo` RPC now returns a `connection_type` field. This indicates
- the type of connection established with the peer. It will return one of six
- options. For more information, see the `getpeerinfo` help documentation.
- (#19725)
-
-- The `getpeerinfo` RPC no longer returns the `addnode` field by default. This
- field will be fully removed in the next major release. It can be accessed
- with the configuration option `-deprecatedrpc=getpeerinfo_addnode`. However,
- it is recommended to instead use the `connection_type` field (it will return
- `manual` when addnode is true). (#19725)
-
-- The `walletcreatefundedpsbt` RPC call will now fail with
- `Insufficient funds` when inputs are manually selected but are not enough to cover
- the outputs and fee. Additional inputs can automatically be added through the
- new `add_inputs` option. (#16377)
-
-- The `fundrawtransaction` RPC now supports `add_inputs` option that when `false`
- prevents adding more inputs if necessary and consequently the RPC fails.
-
Changes to Wallet or GUI related RPCs can be found in the GUI or Wallet section below.
New RPCs
--------
-- The `getindexinfo` RPC returns the actively running indices of the node,
- including their current sync status and height. It also accepts an `index_name`
- to specify returning only the status of that index. (#19550)
-
Build System
------------
+New settings
+------------
+
Updated settings
----------------
-- The same ZeroMQ notification (e.g. `-zmqpubhashtx=address`) can now be
- specified multiple times to publish the same notification to different ZeroMQ
- sockets. (#18309)
-
-- The `-banscore` configuration option, which modified the default threshold for
- disconnecting and discouraging misbehaving peers, has been removed as part of
- changes in 0.20.1 and in this release to the handling of misbehaving peers.
- Refer to "Changes regarding misbehaving peers" in the 0.20.1 release notes for
- details. (#19464)
-
-- The `-debug=db` logging category, which was deprecated in 0.20 and replaced by
- `-debug=walletdb` to distinguish it from `coindb`, has been removed. (#19202)
-
-- A `download` permission has been extracted from the `noban` permission. For
- compatibility, `noban` implies the `download` permission, but this may change
- in future releases. Refer to the help of the affected settings `-whitebind`
- and `-whitelist` for more details. (#19191)
-
-- Netmasks that contain 1-bits after 0-bits (the 1-bits are not contiguous on
- the left side, e.g. 255.0.255.255) are no longer accepted. They are invalid
- according to RFC 4632. Netmasks are used in the `-rpcallowip` and `-whitelist`
- configuration options and in the `setban` RPC. (#19628)
-
-Changes to Wallet or GUI related settings can be found in the GUI or Wallet section below.
+Changes to Wallet or GUI related settings can be found in the GUI or Wallet section below.
Tools and Utilities
-------------------
-- The `connections` field of `bitcoin-cli -getinfo` is expanded to return a JSON
- object with `in`, `out` and `total` numbers of peer connections. It previously
- returned a single integer value for the total number of peer connections. (#19405)
-
-- A new `bitcoin-cli -generate` command, equivalent to RPC `generatenewaddress`
- followed by `generatetoaddress`, can generate blocks for command line testing
- purposes. This is a client-side version of the
- former `generate` RPC. See the help for details. (#19133)
-
-- The `bitcoin-cli -getinfo` command now displays the wallet name and balance for
- each of the loaded wallets when more than one is loaded (e.g. in multiwallet
- mode) and a wallet is not specified with `-rpcwallet`. (#18594)
-
-New settings
-------------
-
-- The `startupnotify` option is used to specify a command to
- execute when Bitcoin Core has finished with its startup
- sequence. (#15367)
-
Wallet
------
-- Backwards compatibility has been dropped for two `getaddressinfo` RPC
- deprecations, as notified in the 0.20 release notes. The deprecated `label`
- field has been removed as well as the deprecated `labels` behavior of
- returning a JSON object containing `name` and `purpose` key-value pairs. Since
- 0.20, the `labels` field returns a JSON array of label names. (#19200)
-
-- To improve wallet privacy, the frequency of wallet rebroadcast attempts is
- reduced from approximately once every 15 minutes to once every 12-36 hours.
- To maintain a similar level of guarantee for initial broadcast of wallet
- transactions, the mempool tracks these transactions as a part of the newly
- introduced unbroadcast set. See the "P2P and network changes" section for
- more information on the unbroadcast set. (#18038)
-
-- The `sendtoaddress` and `sendmany` RPCs accept an optional `verbose=True`
- argument to also return the fee reason about the sent tx. (#19501)
-
-- The wallet can create a transaction without change even when the keypool is
- empty. Previously it failed. (#17219)
-
-- The `-salvagewallet` startup option has been removed. A new `salvage` command
- has been added to the `bitcoin-wallet` tool which performs the salvage
- operations that `-salvagewallet` did. (#18918)
-
-- A new configuration flag `-maxapsfee` has been added, which sets the max
- allowed avoid partial spends (APS) fee. It defaults to 0 (i.e. fee is the
- same with and without APS). Setting it to -1 will disable APS, unless
- `-avoidpartialspends` is set. (#14582)
-
-- The wallet will now avoid partial spends (APS) by default, if this does not
- result in a difference in fees compared to the non-APS variant. The allowed
- fee threshold can be adjusted using the new `-maxapsfee` configuration
- option. (#14582)
-
-- The `createwallet`, `loadwallet`, and `unloadwallet` RPCs now accept
- `load_on_startup` options to modify the settings list. Unless these options
- are explicitly set to true or false, the list is not modified, so the RPC
- methods remain backwards compatible. (#15937)
-
-- A new `send` RPC with similar syntax to `walletcreatefundedpsbt`, including
- support for coin selection and a custom fee rate. The `send` RPC is
- experimental and may change in subsequent releases. Using it is encouraged
- once it's no longer experimental: `sendmany` and `sendtoaddress` may be
- deprecated in a future release. (#16378)
-
-- `fundrawtransaction` and `walletcreatefundedpsbt` when used with the
- `lockUnspents` argument now lock manually selected coins, in addition to
- automatically selected coins. Note that locked coins are never used in
- automatic coin selection, but can still be manually selected. (#18244)
-
-- The `-zapwallettxes` startup option has been removed and its functionality
- removed from the wallet. This option was originally intended to allow for
- the fee bumping of transactions that did not signal RBF. This functionality
- has been superseded with the abandon transaction feature. (#19671)
-
-- The error code when no wallet is loaded, but a wallet RPC is called, has been
- changed from `-32601` (method not found) to `-18` (wallet not found).
- (#20101)
-
-### Automatic wallet creation removed
-
-Bitcoin Core will no longer automatically create new wallets on startup. It will
-load existing wallets specified by `-wallet` options on the command line or in
-`bitcoin.conf` or `settings.json` files. And by default it will also load a
-top-level unnamed ("") wallet. However, if specified wallets don't exist,
-Bitcoin Core will now just log warnings instead of creating new wallets with
-new keys and addresses like previous releases did.
-
-New wallets can be created through the GUI (which has a more prominent create
-wallet option), through the `bitcoin-cli createwallet` or `bitcoin-wallet
-create` commands, or the `createwallet` RPC. (#15454)
-
-### Experimental Descriptor Wallets
-
-Please note that Descriptor Wallets are still experimental and not all expected functionality
-is available. Additionally there may be some bugs and current functions may change in the future.
-Bugs and missing functionality can be reported to the [issue tracker](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues).
-
-0.21 introduces a new type of wallet - Descriptor Wallets. Descriptor Wallets store
-scriptPubKey information using descriptors. This is in contrast to the Legacy Wallet
-structure where keys are used to generate scriptPubKeys and addresses. Because of this
-shift to being script based instead of key based, many of the confusing things that Legacy
-Wallets do are not possible with Descriptor Wallets. Descriptor Wallets use a definition
-of "mine" for scripts which is simpler and more intuitive than that used by Legacy Wallets.
-Descriptor Wallets also uses different semantics for watch-only things and imports.
-
-As Descriptor Wallets are a new type of wallet, their introduction does not affect existing wallets.
-Users who already have a Bitcoin Core wallet can continue to use it as they did before without
-any change in behavior. Newly created Legacy Wallets (which is the default type of wallet) will
-behave as they did in previous versions of Bitcoin Core.
-
-The differences between Descriptor Wallets and Legacy Wallets are largely limited to non user facing
-things. They are intended to behave similarly except for the import/export and watchonly functionality
-as described below.
-
-#### Creating Descriptor Wallets
-
-Descriptor Wallets are not created by default. They must be explicitly created using the
-`createwallet` RPC or via the GUI. A `descriptors` option has been added to `createwallet`.
-Setting `descriptors` to `true` will create a Descriptor Wallet instead of a Legacy Wallet.
-
-In the GUI, a checkbox has been added to the Create Wallet Dialog to indicate that a
-Descriptor Wallet should be created.
-
-Without those options being set, a Legacy Wallet will be created instead. Additionally the
-Default Wallet created upon first startup of Bitcoin Core will be a Legacy Wallet.
-
-#### `IsMine` Semantics
-
-`IsMine` refers to the function used to determine whether a script belongs to the wallet.
-This is used to determine whether an output belongs to the wallet. `IsMine` in Legacy Wallets
-returns true if the wallet would be able to sign an input that spends an output with that script.
-Since keys can be involved in a variety of different scripts, this definition for `IsMine` can
-lead to many unexpected scripts being considered part of the wallet.
-
-With Descriptor Wallets, descriptors explicitly specify the set of scripts that are owned by
-the wallet. Since descriptors are deterministic and easily enumerable, users will know exactly
-what scripts the wallet will consider to belong to it. Additionally the implementation of `IsMine`
-in Descriptor Wallets is far simpler than for Legacy Wallets. Notably, in Legacy Wallets, `IsMine`
-allowed for users to take one type of address (e.g. P2PKH), mutate it into another address type
-(e.g. P2WPKH), and the wallet would still detect outputs sending to the new address type
-even without that address being requested from the wallet. Descriptor Wallets does not
-allow for this and will only watch for the addresses that were explicitly requested from the wallet.
-
-These changes to `IsMine` will make it easier to reason about what scripts the wallet will
-actually be watching for in outputs. However for the vast majority of users, this change is
-largely transparent and will not have noticeable effect.
-
-#### Imports and Exports
-
-In Legacy Wallets, raw scripts and keys could be imported to the wallet. Those imported scripts
-and keys are treated separately from the keys generated by the wallet. This complicates the `IsMine`
-logic as it has to distinguish between spendable and watchonly.
-
-Descriptor Wallets handle importing scripts and keys differently. Only complete descriptors can be
-imported. These descriptors are then added to the wallet as if it were a descriptor generated by
-the wallet itself. This simplifies the `IsMine` logic so that it no longer has to distinguish
-between spendable and watchonly. As such, the watchonly model for Descriptor Wallets is also
-different and described in more detail in the next section.
-
-To import into a Descriptor Wallet, a new `importdescriptors` RPC has been added that uses a syntax
-similar to that of `importmulti`.
-
-As Legacy Wallets and Descriptor Wallets use different mechanisms for storing and importing scripts and keys
-the existing import RPCs have been disabled for descriptor wallets.
-New export RPCs for Descriptor Wallets have not yet been added.
-
-The following RPCs are disabled for Descriptor Wallets:
-
-* importprivkey
-* importpubkey
-* importaddress
-* importwallet
-* dumpprivkey
-* dumpwallet
-* importmulti
-* addmultisigaddress
-* sethdseed
-
-#### Watchonly Wallets
-
-A Legacy Wallet contains both private keys and scripts that were being watched.
-Those watched scripts would not contribute to your normal balance. In order to see the watchonly
-balance and to use watchonly things in transactions, an `include_watchonly` option was added
-to many RPCs that would allow users to do that. However it is easy to forget to include this option.
-
-Descriptor Wallets move to a per-wallet watchonly model. Instead an entire wallet is considered to be
-watchonly depending on whether it was created with private keys disabled. This eliminates the need
-to distinguish between things that are watchonly and things that are not within a wallet itself.
-
-This change does have a caveat. If a Descriptor Wallet with private keys *enabled* has
-a multiple key descriptor without all of the private keys (e.g. `multi(...)` with only one private key),
-then the wallet will fail to sign and broadcast transactions. Such wallets would need to use the PSBT
-workflow but the typical GUI Send, `sendtoaddress`, etc. workflows would still be available, just
-non-functional.
-
-This issue is worsened if the wallet contains both single key (e.g. `wpkh(...)`) descriptors and such
-multiple key descriptors as some transactions could be signed and broadast and others not. This is
-due to some transactions containing only single key inputs, while others would contain both single
-key and multiple key inputs, depending on which are available and how the coin selection algorithm
-selects inputs. However this is not considered to be a supported use case; multisigs
-should be in their own wallets which do not already have descriptors. Although users cannot export
-descriptors with private keys for now as explained earlier.
-
-#### BIP 44/49/84 Support
-
-The change to using descriptors changes the default derivation paths used by Bitcoin Core
-to adhere to BIP 44/49/84. Descriptors with different derivation paths can be imported without
-issue.
-
-### Wallet RPC changes
-
-- The `upgradewallet` RPC replaces the `-upgradewallet` command line option.
- (#15761)
-- The `settxfee` RPC will fail if the fee was set higher than the `-maxtxfee`
- command line setting. The wallet will already fail to create transactions
- with fees higher than `-maxtxfee`. (#18467)
-
GUI changes
-----------
-- Wallets created or loaded in the GUI will now be automatically loaded on
- startup, so they don't need to be manually reloaded next time Bitcoin Core is
- started. The list of wallets to load on startup is stored in
- `\<datadir\>/settings.json` and augments any command line or `bitcoin.conf`
- `-wallet=` settings that specify more wallets to load. Wallets that are
- unloaded in the GUI get removed from the settings list so they won't load
- again automatically next startup. (#19754)
-
-- The GUI Peers window no longer displays a "Ban Score" field. This is part of
- changes in 0.20.1 and in this release to the handling of misbehaving
- peers. Refer to "Changes regarding misbehaving peers" in the 0.20.1 release
- notes for details. (#19512)
-
Low-level changes
=================
RPC
---
-- To make RPC `sendtoaddress` more consistent with `sendmany` the following error
- `sendtoaddress` codes were changed from `-4` to `-6`:
- - Insufficient funds
- - Fee estimation failed
- - Transaction has too long of a mempool chain
-
-- The `sendrawtransaction` error code for exceeding `maxfeerate` has been changed from
- `-26` to `-25`. The error string has been changed from "absurdly-high-fee" to
- "Fee exceeds maximum configured by user (e.g. -maxtxfee, maxfeerate)." The
- `testmempoolaccept` RPC returns `max-fee-exceeded` rather than `absurdly-high-fee`
- as the `reject-reason`. (#19339)
-
-- To make wallet and rawtransaction RPCs more consistent, the error message for
- exceeding maximum feerate has been changed to "Fee exceeds maximum configured by user
- (e.g. -maxtxfee, maxfeerate)." (#19339)
-
Tests
-----
-- The BIP 325 default signet can be enabled by the `-chain=signet` or `-signet`
- setting. The settings `-signetchallenge` and `-signetseednode` allow
- enabling a custom signet.
-
Credits
=======